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Feb 9, 2013
02/13
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that was never the intention of this government. i and colleagues would never have supported it had it been so. belatedly only this weekend the church of england has finally admitted that it is not realistic that churches would be forced to conduct same-sex weddings. i made that point earlier. so easy to say that now when practically every person i need to doesn't follow the deliberations of political theater in great detail has said to me it is about weddings and churches for gay people, isn't it? that is the misapprehensions many of my constituents who are opposed to this bill have labored under including members of my own association and i would like to go on record, my appreciation of those individuals who treated me with courtesy and respect for such as i can in conscience support this bill this evening without fear or favor. many of them said that we are legislating for gay weddings in church and we are not and i am satisfied by the advice of the attorney general that that is an infinitesimal possibility. we heard about the co
that was never the intention of this government. i and colleagues would never have supported it had it been so. belatedly only this weekend the church of england has finally admitted that it is not realistic that churches would be forced to conduct same-sex weddings. i made that point earlier. so easy to say that now when practically every person i need to doesn't follow the deliberations of political theater in great detail has said to me it is about weddings and churches for gay people, isn't...
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Jan 1, 2013
01/13
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this, as far as i know, started in england, and it's very effective in england bought the government got involved in addition to the book sellers, and it really got well-organized to the point where basically every kid in the country get money to go in and buy a book, and the bookstores sort of, you know, price them in a nice way. this won't be as big yet, but i think we're giving away a half a million books. >> right. >> it's a start, and you know, once again, we just -- what we really need more than anything else is for the government to wake up or the various governments whether it's going to be handled at -- whether you're states person or a federal person, it's got to be dealt with somewhere, and education same thing. i mean, we're not figuring it out right for some reason. >> let me ask you on a personal note, were you a strong reader as a kid? >> i was a strong reader, a very good student, but i was not a big reader. >> when did that -- >> i grew up on comic books. >> did you? >> yeah. >> when did the book thing start? >> the book thing, really -- and i was a good student, but
this, as far as i know, started in england, and it's very effective in england bought the government got involved in addition to the book sellers, and it really got well-organized to the point where basically every kid in the country get money to go in and buy a book, and the bookstores sort of, you know, price them in a nice way. this won't be as big yet, but i think we're giving away a half a million books. >> right. >> it's a start, and you know, once again, we just -- what we...
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Feb 9, 2013
02/13
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the bill provides and promotes religious freedom to the government laws. these protections are absolutely on the face of the bill and foundation upon which the legislation is bill. all give way to the honorable gentleman and then my honorable friend. >> i'm grateful to the secretary of state. can she explain why she's bringing the government this bill now at a time when there hasn't been the subject of a green paper or white paper and are set against the government promised to do that they're not doing searches tax allowances. isn't the truth that this is about political calculation rather than anything to do with principle? [shouting] >> the honorable gentleman and i will disagree on this. we are doing this very clearly as an important part that we can make this a fair place to live. the measure was clearly side up with qualities at the time of election and what a day to say is we will continue to work with our colleagues in northern ireland to make sure we have the right recognition for english and welsh marriages in the northern ireland part of the unit
the bill provides and promotes religious freedom to the government laws. these protections are absolutely on the face of the bill and foundation upon which the legislation is bill. all give way to the honorable gentleman and then my honorable friend. >> i'm grateful to the secretary of state. can she explain why she's bringing the government this bill now at a time when there hasn't been the subject of a green paper or white paper and are set against the government promised to do that...
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Sep 15, 2013
09/13
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that is one of the movement's toward a strong tough government of socialism that government contains. >> chapter 57 bad amendments is the name of the chapter eight and you say bad points of the 14th amendment? >> we have so many good intentions when they violate correct principles, then the country stars to go off into areas that create more problems stem the road. one is about citizenship be here long enough to have a baby that baby can become a citizen. that shows all kinds of havoc with our immigration issues and that is what we're fighting and wrestling right now because good people usually want to come to our country but we need a mechanism to keep those out that will hurt the country. how do you do that? that system was torn down. >> host: isn't the 14th amendment known as the due process amendments? >> guest: correct. >> host: people are in favor of that and it was used in slavery. >> guest: correct. eyeless to those parts but at the same time it was very poorly written we need to revisit to take care of some of these negatives because yes we like that with ending slivers -- sl
that is one of the movement's toward a strong tough government of socialism that government contains. >> chapter 57 bad amendments is the name of the chapter eight and you say bad points of the 14th amendment? >> we have so many good intentions when they violate correct principles, then the country stars to go off into areas that create more problems stem the road. one is about citizenship be here long enough to have a baby that baby can become a citizen. that shows all kinds of...
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111
Jan 30, 2013
01/13
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the previous government and his government both work to try and increase some of the penalties associated with the drivers who ended up killing people through the recklessness and carelessness. i will look carefully of what he says and arrange for them to meet with the justice secretary. i do think it's important that we give our caused a sense that when you are appalling extraordinary crimes, they can take exemplary action. i think that is important in a justice system and i look very carefully at what he said. >> thank you on the subject of food safety, the concern -- [inaudible] [laughter] >> that was -- i was -- [shouting] i had -- i had somewhere in my briefing, i had some very complicated information about the danger of particular drugs for horses entering the food chain, and i have to say, he threw me completely without ingenious if it. [laughter] i think what i'd say is the conservative party has always been for people who want to work hard and get on, and i'm glad that all of my all of those behind the taken very seriously indeed. [shouting] >> as my right honorable friend sets f
the previous government and his government both work to try and increase some of the penalties associated with the drivers who ended up killing people through the recklessness and carelessness. i will look carefully of what he says and arrange for them to meet with the justice secretary. i do think it's important that we give our caused a sense that when you are appalling extraordinary crimes, they can take exemplary action. i think that is important in a justice system and i look very...
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Dec 30, 2013
12/13
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protected right, many religious groups have been persecuted throughout history sometimes by the very government that is supposed to protect them. this program is about an hour. >> host: hello, peter. how are you whacks this is a good time to have this conversation because thanksgiving is approaching and it's a time to celebrate our founding fathers and mothers search for religious tolerance. but your book is part of the promise and the way that you introduce it is you are interested in challenging this idea that america is a place of tolerance and that intolerance is a very american thing. so tell me is the narrative wrong in your point of view? the targets in the groups found refuge here at times because the persecution and other places so that is a part that has to be embraced. but it's also the important to realize the way that it's been crafted as a kind of a master narrative in which the religious toleration is forefront to the degree that has an unfortunate part. in example is a lot of americans think that it was founded in the european settlement by the puritans, but actually they were e
protected right, many religious groups have been persecuted throughout history sometimes by the very government that is supposed to protect them. this program is about an hour. >> host: hello, peter. how are you whacks this is a good time to have this conversation because thanksgiving is approaching and it's a time to celebrate our founding fathers and mothers search for religious tolerance. but your book is part of the promise and the way that you introduce it is you are interested in...
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Jun 19, 2013
06/13
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why isn't the government doing it? >> first of all i would rather listen to my chancellor than listen to his neighbor, the shadow chancellor. [laughter] [shouting] we remember his advice. 125% mortgages for northern rail, that's fine. a knighthood for fred goodwin, that's fine. the biggest banking bust in british history, that's fine. he wants the city minister when all of this went wrong. and it's this government that is click of the most but as i say we wouldn't have these results without this inquiry commissioned by this government. we wouldn't be able to legislate if we didn't have the excellent banking bill provided by this government. and the terms of this question, we are putting a ring fence around retail banks, something in 13 years of the labour government although they were both in the treasury they never got around to. [shouting] >> i do say we are really not going to take advice from the guy -- from the guy who is the advisor on black wednesday in 1992. [shouting] and he had no answer to the question about
why isn't the government doing it? >> first of all i would rather listen to my chancellor than listen to his neighbor, the shadow chancellor. [laughter] [shouting] we remember his advice. 125% mortgages for northern rail, that's fine. a knighthood for fred goodwin, that's fine. the biggest banking bust in british history, that's fine. he wants the city minister when all of this went wrong. and it's this government that is click of the most but as i say we wouldn't have these results...
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Dec 25, 2013
12/13
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, it had national government, it had a fund edit. it was, in fact, what many historians call aphis stall military state, state in which -- a fiscal military state, state in which given the economic measures that had begun to come into play around the 1690s in england, the nation had plenty of money to expand, and as it expanded, it acquired more wealth which flowed back into england and enabled it to expand even more. so that england, which in the mid-17th under, had been a rather backwater country in the affairs of europe, had, by hamilton and -- jefferson's time, become the largest empire in the western world since the roman empire. the most powerful country. the country that had won the seven years war or what we call the french and indian war, and hamilton begins to articulate this vision of the english economic system for america in a series of essays that he published in newspapers in 1780 when he was only 25 years old; writing as what he called the continentalist. for jefferson, the pivotal moment in the 1780s occurs when he g
, it had national government, it had a fund edit. it was, in fact, what many historians call aphis stall military state, state in which -- a fiscal military state, state in which given the economic measures that had begun to come into play around the 1690s in england, the nation had plenty of money to expand, and as it expanded, it acquired more wealth which flowed back into england and enabled it to expand even more. so that england, which in the mid-17th under, had been a rather backwater...
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Nov 17, 2013
11/13
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[applause] its limited government, not many state. [applause] god, not government. [cheers and applause] its faith, not secularism. it's life, not death. it's equality of opportunity, not equality of outcome. it's goodness, not moral equivalence. it's being bold, not bland. brave, not need. it's choosing extraordinary over mediocre. that's america right there. [applause] >> i'll tell you what else i get asked. and i'll never forget the first time it was asked of me. it was in harrisburg, pennsylvania. hostile local television reporter was covering one of my speeches. the moment we got on camera, the ambush happened. why does in australia and care about america? what do you care? luckily, that wasn't my first rodeo. i knew the game and i knew the list. i spent eight years dealing with media bias and distortion in the australian media, while in public office. without even blinking i shot to shot back, because what is good for america is good for the world. a week american -- [applause] a week american is a we the world. a strong american is a strong world. everyone in
[applause] its limited government, not many state. [applause] god, not government. [cheers and applause] its faith, not secularism. it's life, not death. it's equality of opportunity, not equality of outcome. it's goodness, not moral equivalence. it's being bold, not bland. brave, not need. it's choosing extraordinary over mediocre. that's america right there. [applause] >> i'll tell you what else i get asked. and i'll never forget the first time it was asked of me. it was in harrisburg,...
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Sep 30, 2013
09/13
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responsibility, constitutionally limited government and free market. we knew it would take 40 years to achieve our goal and we are four years into mechanical is to restore the constitutionally limited responsible government. >> are you stronger, more organized, more established? >> we are all free. a stronger, more organized and more established. we have over 3,000 troops now voluntarily affiliated with tea party patriots. the movement is alive and well and we are really -- we have been 32 cycles now. we've been through a cycle where we had great success and we've been through a cycle where some of the people we wanted elected lost. it's a learning process for the people involved especially if you are new to politics you have to get through the win and the loss to fully understand the whole process. and so, we are much more mature. >> published by henry commitee party patriots start by talking about how you came to this movement. how did you come to this movement? >> when i first started, i had gone through and was coming literally right at the end of
responsibility, constitutionally limited government and free market. we knew it would take 40 years to achieve our goal and we are four years into mechanical is to restore the constitutionally limited responsible government. >> are you stronger, more organized, more established? >> we are all free. a stronger, more organized and more established. we have over 3,000 troops now voluntarily affiliated with tea party patriots. the movement is alive and well and we are really -- we have...
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Feb 13, 2013
02/13
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can the prime minister assure me that this government will relentlessly follow every lead and give each an every guilty person or business responsible for any criminal or fraudulent act has been caught, exposed, prosecuted, and then expelled from ever again having any part in the uk food industry? >> i fully support what the honorable gentleman has said, but first of all let me join him in praising the constable. she died going about her job, keeping people safe in that unity, as those wishing the two other injured officers a full and quick recovery. i would join him in sydney my deepest condolences and those of a bullea point in this house tor colleagues and her loved ones. on the issue of this appalling situation where people buying these products in supermarkets are finding out that it could be horsemeat, let me say this. and bring the house up-to-date if i can come on the 15th of january it was that the irish authority identified problems in the number of beef products. on the 16th of january i said to the house that i would ask them to conduct an urgent investigation. as part of th
can the prime minister assure me that this government will relentlessly follow every lead and give each an every guilty person or business responsible for any criminal or fraudulent act has been caught, exposed, prosecuted, and then expelled from ever again having any part in the uk food industry? >> i fully support what the honorable gentleman has said, but first of all let me join him in praising the constable. she died going about her job, keeping people safe in that unity, as those...
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Sep 29, 2013
09/13
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we turned down that government money and start over our own. religiously kinnear neighbors bathrooms and a set of them painful hours. and so we got involved. we started at the party. got on a conference call. a week later we were one of 48 to parties around the country. >> who is mark mcclure? >> my co-author, co-founder of the two-party patriots. he is no longer with the two-party patriots, but he's doing the same thing i am, working to restore constitutional limited fiscally responsible governments. >> another thing you detail is with the tea party movement is not. how has it been portrayed through the media and what points do you want to make? >> one t
we turned down that government money and start over our own. religiously kinnear neighbors bathrooms and a set of them painful hours. and so we got involved. we started at the party. got on a conference call. a week later we were one of 48 to parties around the country. >> who is mark mcclure? >> my co-author, co-founder of the two-party patriots. he is no longer with the two-party patriots, but he's doing the same thing i am, working to restore constitutional limited fiscally...
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Oct 26, 2013
10/13
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going after him as aggressively as the government did to seek a punishment that the government sought might suggest they are selectively targeting people who challenges they have done. and that is worrying. social media is an interesting part of the equation in the context of schools or student speech raising questions to what extent can students be disciplined at school for what they put on facebook at home with the students are accessing facebook at school still has a disruptive effect. the social media has greatly expanded our ability to speak and democratized to get the message out that the same time it is a tricky question about free-speech. >> what was the general reaction to this opinion from his fellow justices in the general opinion of academia. >> tell the story that you start the book with. >> holmes writes the dissenting opinion in he always writes his dissent before the majority opinion is circulated because he wants a ready to go so he can distribute to his colleagues at everything was sent by messenger. he gets the majority opinion he sends the descent we know this beca
going after him as aggressively as the government did to seek a punishment that the government sought might suggest they are selectively targeting people who challenges they have done. and that is worrying. social media is an interesting part of the equation in the context of schools or student speech raising questions to what extent can students be disciplined at school for what they put on facebook at home with the students are accessing facebook at school still has a disruptive effect. the...
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May 5, 2013
05/13
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sharing their point of view, and at least, much of history and too much the world today is under the government of coercion in that respect. >> host: booktv on c-span2, and we are in london talking with various authors while here. today joining us is professor anthony grayling, the god argument the most recent book. while we tape the interview, a new pope is being chosen. what are your thoughts about that? >> guest: a new relevance, a little of theater, has a comic aspect and a serious aspect, which is, of course, there's hundreds of millions of people who record themselves as being roman catholics, therefore, influenced by the policies that the new pope comes up with. priests going to be able to marry, change a view of contraception, will the moral teachings of the church become more liberal or more authoritarian? these are matters that impact people's lives. prince my, by the way, since the great majority of members of the catholic church use contraception, they are in odds with the official teachings of the church, and, unfortunately, obliged in the interest of bearing chirp and interest of
sharing their point of view, and at least, much of history and too much the world today is under the government of coercion in that respect. >> host: booktv on c-span2, and we are in london talking with various authors while here. today joining us is professor anthony grayling, the god argument the most recent book. while we tape the interview, a new pope is being chosen. what are your thoughts about that? >> guest: a new relevance, a little of theater, has a comic aspect and a...
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Apr 24, 2013
04/13
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. 6000 more doctors under this government. 7000 fewer managers under this government. 1 million more treated in a&e, half a million more day cases, commonplace under labour virtually abolished under this government. inspection rates in our nhs at record low levels but as i said, waiting times for inpatient doubt, waiting times for outpatients stable. all of this happening under this coalition government, a far better record than he could boast. >> mr. speaker, people up and down the country will have heard, this is a prime minister with no answer for the crisis in our nhs to any services across the country. there with the crisis in a&e and it's no surprise he is cut a number of nurses come his nhs helpline is in crisis and he is wasting billions of pounds on a top down reorganization that he promised wouldn't happen. the facts speak for themselves. the nhs is not safe in his hands. [shouting] >> let us examine the nhs in labour's hands in wales. here are the figures but nhs budget isn't being increased? it is being cut by 8% by labour. last time the urgent tactic of tables met in wal
. 6000 more doctors under this government. 7000 fewer managers under this government. 1 million more treated in a&e, half a million more day cases, commonplace under labour virtually abolished under this government. inspection rates in our nhs at record low levels but as i said, waiting times for inpatient doubt, waiting times for outpatients stable. all of this happening under this coalition government, a far better record than he could boast. >> mr. speaker, people up and down the...
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Oct 14, 2013
10/13
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[laughter] they did not have the legal government said then they got their due charter from government said they had to rewrite the law to conform with the english law. but it was neighborhood animosity with ever of the economic and the war and i cannot say what specifically but everything seemed to prove the worst fears one of the suspects started to confess there of their which is out there people would say now who do i go? into was scared into confessing somebody said dave remember hearing they do that they had confessed it was wrong so they were scared. and they said there are witches out there but and that was a bad month of september. of the families of the accused for the most part. then the other side started to be heard they put everything on hold in october then resumed in the winter because the jail was so full that at that time is somebody said they see somebody spirit torture in the and somebody said i see that all so now that is not evidence because the devil can make you think that. >> kate you talk about the reason for choosing these six women specifically? work you fou
[laughter] they did not have the legal government said then they got their due charter from government said they had to rewrite the law to conform with the english law. but it was neighborhood animosity with ever of the economic and the war and i cannot say what specifically but everything seemed to prove the worst fears one of the suspects started to confess there of their which is out there people would say now who do i go? into was scared into confessing somebody said dave remember hearing...
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Apr 8, 2013
04/13
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so they went to the government to say we cannot do it anymore. the signal corps made irresponsibility was communication on the battlefield where in those days looking for somreason to stay in business. this is the way bureaucracy's always work. this institution was created and served its purpose and america was at peace and the signal corps said instead of the disbanded they said we have to find something else to do and came up the idea we will take over the weather service. it sounds like a boondoggle but they took this responsibility very seriously. they began predicting weather, the first to issue a daily weather forecast and worked out a system. the texture of everyday life that we have completely forgotten but they set up a system where post offices and train stations and government offices would fly flags each day to tell people what the weather was. that is how you got your whether. he would glance over at the train station and you would know the codes that white men to clear and blue meant rain and there was a special one particularly ala
so they went to the government to say we cannot do it anymore. the signal corps made irresponsibility was communication on the battlefield where in those days looking for somreason to stay in business. this is the way bureaucracy's always work. this institution was created and served its purpose and america was at peace and the signal corps said instead of the disbanded they said we have to find something else to do and came up the idea we will take over the weather service. it sounds like a...
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Dec 14, 2013
12/13
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, and hamilton favored obviously a much stronger government. so the power of government is essential for liberty, hamilton says in the first federalist. that is as close as i can come to put them in a contemporary context. >> is there a contemporary point where jefferson and hamilton realized they were putting us on the path towards political parties and factions which hamilton warned us of in number 10? >> jefferson, in the wake of the passage of the bank bill, washington signing of the bank bill, jefferson and madison go on that famous for up to new york and jefferson's intention was not to found a political party but just to take people who had had reservations about the constitution and even more so people in congress who had reservations about hamilton's economic program that unfolded to that point and to bring about a concerted opposition, not to undo what hamilton had done necessarily but to prevent him from going in -- any further with that. jefferson hadn't planned a political party. it becomes, the group that he founded becomes a poli
, and hamilton favored obviously a much stronger government. so the power of government is essential for liberty, hamilton says in the first federalist. that is as close as i can come to put them in a contemporary context. >> is there a contemporary point where jefferson and hamilton realized they were putting us on the path towards political parties and factions which hamilton warned us of in number 10? >> jefferson, in the wake of the passage of the bank bill, washington signing...
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Dec 29, 2013
12/13
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right many religious groups have been persecuted throughout american history sometimes by the very government that is supposed to protect them. this program is about an hour. >> host: hello peter. >> guest: hello michelle, how are you? >> host: this is a good time to approach this subject because thanksgiving is approaching and that's a time we'd like to talk about our -- founding fathers. you are interested in challenging this idea that america is a place of religious tolerance and actually that intolerance is a very american thing. tell me, is our narrative wrong? >> guest: it's not so much that the narratives are completely wrong. there is a lot to celebrate in american history regarding tolerance from various groups that have found refuge here at times because of persecution in other places so that's a part of the narrative that we have to embrace but it's also realizing the narrative has been a master nrda in which religious tolerance as for fred to a degree that has eclipsed the more and fortunate parts and i think parts and i think the thanksgiving example is a good one because a lot o
right many religious groups have been persecuted throughout american history sometimes by the very government that is supposed to protect them. this program is about an hour. >> host: hello peter. >> guest: hello michelle, how are you? >> host: this is a good time to approach this subject because thanksgiving is approaching and that's a time we'd like to talk about our -- founding fathers. you are interested in challenging this idea that america is a place of religious...
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Dec 8, 2013
12/13
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the government shutdown strategy was about the stupidest strategy imaginable. you could see that coming, that disaster coming. as my professor said like a freight train out of the mist, slowly coming your direction about to run you over. no. you could see it for four weeks. no. i mean, come on. get out of the way. that is what krauthammer walker and myself for saying and they didn't do it. i talked to somebody that was, we will just say he played pretty big role in this strategy. i went into his office and i said dude, what were you thinking? you just thought wrong. your problem is and this is what krauthammer said, the crisis. he said these guys think this makes them look more manly or something. they don't realize it makes them look like idiots. and i said to this guy, this would he like the coach of the dallas cowboys. deciding when it was fourth and 31 instead of hunting they run the quarterback sneak. maybe you think that would make you more manly. i would guess the fans in the stadium with a to differ. that would make them stupid and that is what we were
the government shutdown strategy was about the stupidest strategy imaginable. you could see that coming, that disaster coming. as my professor said like a freight train out of the mist, slowly coming your direction about to run you over. no. you could see it for four weeks. no. i mean, come on. get out of the way. that is what krauthammer walker and myself for saying and they didn't do it. i talked to somebody that was, we will just say he played pretty big role in this strategy. i went into...
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Dec 30, 2013
12/13
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sometimes by the very government that supposed to protect them. this program is about an hour. >> hello, peter >> guest: how are you? >> host: good. thanksgiving is approaching and it's a time when we like to celebrate our founding fathers and mothers search for religious tolerance. but your book, part of the way you introduce it is you're interesting in challenging the idea, you know, that america is a place of religious tolerance and actually that intolerance is very american thing. tell me, is our narrative wrong from your point of view? >> guest: well, most of the martive are -- there is a lot to celebrate in american history regarding tolerance from various groups that found refuge here. so that's a part of the narrative that has to be embraced. it's also important realize the narrative has been crafted as a m.a.er narrative in which the religious toleration is forefronted to a degree that as it could the more unfortunate part. i think thanks giving is an example of a good one. a lot think that the united states was founded as part of the eur
sometimes by the very government that supposed to protect them. this program is about an hour. >> hello, peter >> guest: how are you? >> host: good. thanksgiving is approaching and it's a time when we like to celebrate our founding fathers and mothers search for religious tolerance. but your book, part of the way you introduce it is you're interesting in challenging the idea, you know, that america is a place of religious tolerance and actually that intolerance is very...
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Jun 26, 2013
06/13
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under the labour government. three and a half thousand new children's centers under the labour government. he's got no answe answers let ml in the answer again. the answer is seven out of 576, and five of them were started under the last labour government. [laughter] now he said it takes a long time to complete this project. i thought he might say that. 80% of them haven't even been started. more promises, no delivery. now, let's see if he can answer another one. last year the government said its new by guarantees to help 100,000 people buy a new home. how may people as he hopes of our? >> thousands of people, and has been welcomed by the entire industry. he talks about what was built under a labour government. we saw the results. i pfi scheme that was still paying the debt, we saw the results, and 11% of gdp, budget deficit that this government will cut in half. those are the proof of what we are doing, and we all know that the one question he asked to answer is will he now admits he wants to put borrowing up. w
under the labour government. three and a half thousand new children's centers under the labour government. he's got no answe answers let ml in the answer again. the answer is seven out of 576, and five of them were started under the last labour government. [laughter] now he said it takes a long time to complete this project. i thought he might say that. 80% of them haven't even been started. more promises, no delivery. now, let's see if he can answer another one. last year the government said...
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Aug 11, 2013
08/13
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and in any government. there cannot be many guts. there must be one god and the source of sovereignty and the british empire and the british government is parliament, the king and parliament. and the american solution is unacceptable because it creates multiple versions of sovereignty. each calling will have its own sovereign government. even though they claim to work within the canopy of the british king. we can't have that. not sent, since aristotle everybody knows you have to have a final source of sovereignty. by the way, the whole american constitution is based on sensing with that idea. james madison is the major architect. a second reason is an early 18th century version of what will come to call the domino theory. if we grant the americans this degree of latitude politically, what happens in ireland? what happens in scotland? what happens in india? we can't send that signal. it's a sign of weakness. assigned where not really an empire. again, if they had acted on this they would've discovered the british commonwealth 100 year
and in any government. there cannot be many guts. there must be one god and the source of sovereignty and the british empire and the british government is parliament, the king and parliament. and the american solution is unacceptable because it creates multiple versions of sovereignty. each calling will have its own sovereign government. even though they claim to work within the canopy of the british king. we can't have that. not sent, since aristotle everybody knows you have to have a final...
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Sep 1, 2013
09/13
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many were benefiting from huge government, tracts. confronted with such stark racism, it would have been understandable if these women had given a. thousands of african-american women refuse to let racism and discrimination keep them from serving their country in a time of need. bertha stallworth got a job as an inspector at an arsenal of pennsylvania. our hunter left her position as a domestic in texas and secured a job in a california plant is built warships. in chicago, sammy curry and hattie alexy and i went to work for the columbia central railroad. they shoveled vendors in pics. betty murphy phillips was a journalist working for the family newspaper, the baltimore afro-american. she became the first black female overseas workforce when she traveled in 1944. after giving that she reported her hospital bed as black soldiers came to her bedside to tell their stories. willa brown holiday commercial pilot license and a master mechanic certificate. can you imagine how unusual that was in the late 30s? she's hot aviation classes for th
many were benefiting from huge government, tracts. confronted with such stark racism, it would have been understandable if these women had given a. thousands of african-american women refuse to let racism and discrimination keep them from serving their country in a time of need. bertha stallworth got a job as an inspector at an arsenal of pennsylvania. our hunter left her position as a domestic in texas and secured a job in a california plant is built warships. in chicago, sammy curry and...
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Jan 2, 2013
01/13
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and avoidance of this concept called the government, the government does this, the government does that. that is the ray fied state which is the human being resistic statement about the absence of god of society without god. the government becomes the idol. and so what i would suggest for the conservative who really want to restore this notion of the original principle that limited government is to focus on teaching the science association , and that teaching the science of association will give people access to the technology of rulemaking. that allows governance to be conducted in the little platoons that make up society. i would welcome any thoughts or comments the panelists have. and i wouldn't thank the professor -- i would thank the professor for raising that issue. >> give us a shot. of course, i agree with the last part of your remarks, which is that with should do what is in our power to encourage the platoons, the siphons association, because these are the real schools of virtue, family, religious community, political associations of all sorts. but i can't agree with your advi
and avoidance of this concept called the government, the government does this, the government does that. that is the ray fied state which is the human being resistic statement about the absence of god of society without god. the government becomes the idol. and so what i would suggest for the conservative who really want to restore this notion of the original principle that limited government is to focus on teaching the science association , and that teaching the science of association will...
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Jun 22, 2013
06/13
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you have to fight the government every way. another problem with trying to write on it is the freedom of information act which is an important tool but nsa is the only agency excluded from the freedom of information act a little thing called public law subsections six which i know by heart. congress shall make no law requiring nsa to the bill to information about its organization function structure policy personnel or any other information. i had to find loopholes and 636. i was successful over a number of documents i requested. i ended up getting more than 5000 pages worth. the history is a lot of hard work and trying to get anything out of this agency. when i wrote this new book i approach the agency and i got the same response. we are not going to help you. we are not going to give you any interviews but then a new director came along and the logic in allowing the book to be written about it. i had written the "puzzle palace" and the world did not come to an end after that and as a matter of fact the government ended up usin
you have to fight the government every way. another problem with trying to write on it is the freedom of information act which is an important tool but nsa is the only agency excluded from the freedom of information act a little thing called public law subsections six which i know by heart. congress shall make no law requiring nsa to the bill to information about its organization function structure policy personnel or any other information. i had to find loopholes and 636. i was successful over...
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Jun 30, 2013
06/13
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everythingahp government. it was an ironic use of the term but all state rights had been abandoned and abolished. it was completely a centralized economy like france used to be pivoted and i think it was deleterious in the institutions like the famous british religion almost. it's from the central government >> overall how would you describe david cameron's performance and the state of the british economy? >> the way that all of the western economies are they borrowed too much and they spent too much. cutting spending is very difficult politically. it is in a bad way and i thought he was good when he came in. he's having a terrible time now. he seems to be changing his mind continually. it is not a happy scene at the moment. >> one of the guests we have had on blonden nseries talk about the income inequality in the state's and in great britain that it's the greatest that it's been since the 1930's. d.c. that? is it a danger? >> it causes unhappiness and makes people resentful. they think of the system but i do
everythingahp government. it was an ironic use of the term but all state rights had been abandoned and abolished. it was completely a centralized economy like france used to be pivoted and i think it was deleterious in the institutions like the famous british religion almost. it's from the central government >> overall how would you describe david cameron's performance and the state of the british economy? >> the way that all of the western economies are they borrowed too much and...
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Feb 21, 2013
02/13
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so, we have dealt with cases about ten -- can the government flyover your home and use technology that takes the air that emanates from their home? we have had questions about wiretaps. we have had questions about the gps navigations, gps tracking and people in cars. we will have many more. and for sure the forefathers had no idea that the computer and computer chips would come into this, even benjamin franklin, i doubt very much. [laughter] that he ever in his wildest fantasies imagine that things we could do today. if they had used terms that were more specific than they did we would not have been given the opportunity to define it with experience. and so they did a mixture of some very, very clear things. you cannot do this. one thing we forget about today, you cannot quarter militia in people's homes except in times of war. that is pretty specific. but there were many other things that they left generally. and i think that is why the document has lasted. it gave us a concept. we are guided by that concept, but we are not lead into a fixed time. >> and what worries you about the con
so, we have dealt with cases about ten -- can the government flyover your home and use technology that takes the air that emanates from their home? we have had questions about wiretaps. we have had questions about the gps navigations, gps tracking and people in cars. we will have many more. and for sure the forefathers had no idea that the computer and computer chips would come into this, even benjamin franklin, i doubt very much. [laughter] that he ever in his wildest fantasies imagine that...
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Mar 20, 2013
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the previous government, the previous government borrowed -- [yelling] >> order! order! order! >> we can't have all talk without the year. it's not a competition who can shout loudest. you don't want to boo your own chancellor. i'm sure your constituents would understand if you believe the chamber. let us continue. chancellor exchequer. >> mr. deputy speaker, the facts show the opposite to be true. the previous government borrowed 159 billion. this year the government is forecasted to borrow 114 billion pounds. that's 45 pounds a year less borrowing. borrowing from 108 billion next year and 97 billion in 2014, and 87 billion in the last year before holding 61 billion and 42 billion in the following two years and ensure complete transparency the odr published the number without the cash transfer. they show on the measure too borrow is forecast to fall. we admitted to a fiscal mandate that would balance the current budget over the following rolling five years, i can confirm that they we're on course to meet our fiscal mandate and meet it one year only. however, the likelihood of
the previous government, the previous government borrowed -- [yelling] >> order! order! order! >> we can't have all talk without the year. it's not a competition who can shout loudest. you don't want to boo your own chancellor. i'm sure your constituents would understand if you believe the chamber. let us continue. chancellor exchequer. >> mr. deputy speaker, the facts show the opposite to be true. the previous government borrowed 159 billion. this year the government is...
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Feb 9, 2013
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no government can bind another. that takes the bottom out of every undertaking that my right honorable friend has given. he's about to play to most of us on the side of the house that this bill, the product of the bill will end up before the courts, what i meant before the european court of human rights and people of faith will find that being trampled upon and that to us is intolerable. the cabinet paper -- a gateway to my right honorable friend if she wishes to correct me, but the cabinet paper was entitled marriage. it is not possible to redefine marriage. marriage is the union between a man and a woman, has been historically it remains so. it is alice in wonderland territory, orwellian almost. for any government to seek to, log and try to rewrite the lexicon will not. there is a way forward. then suggested, but it's been a toy. i don't subscribe myself, but i recognize base, if a government is serious about this, abolish the civil partnerships bill, abolish civil marriage and create a civil union bill that appli
no government can bind another. that takes the bottom out of every undertaking that my right honorable friend has given. he's about to play to most of us on the side of the house that this bill, the product of the bill will end up before the courts, what i meant before the european court of human rights and people of faith will find that being trampled upon and that to us is intolerable. the cabinet paper -- a gateway to my right honorable friend if she wishes to correct me, but the cabinet...
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Dec 17, 2013
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to the other government. t something that -- would not have stopped the crisis. there is where -- it would not have stopped the crisis. frankly, you would have ran out of -- [inaudible] if you wanted to -- [inaudible] we have to look at the difference in the operating procedure. they could -- without the debt because of the broader collateral data. and the technical issue only get to. it's not a matter not easily monetary policy. this is a matter of could be -- could they pick a country. it doesn't have to be greece. it could be portugal, could be ireland. without having the prior agreement of the other government they are willing to let the ecb impose the congress on them. frankly, i don't think they had either the legal or the political legitimacy to do this. this is something that -- [inaudible] have a power in italy. they had the political agenda. double youth unemployment in greece. >> and the government did not -- out of his job. >> no. >> even though so much going back to the question. it's 30,000 foot
to the other government. t something that -- would not have stopped the crisis. there is where -- it would not have stopped the crisis. frankly, you would have ran out of -- [inaudible] if you wanted to -- [inaudible] we have to look at the difference in the operating procedure. they could -- without the debt because of the broader collateral data. and the technical issue only get to. it's not a matter not easily monetary policy. this is a matter of could be -- could they pick a country. it...
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Aug 3, 2013
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the government was not giving them proper welfare arrangements . so she was a great campaigner. i think in other fields, more intimate, more, and a sense, and word, emotional if you like. single women also had a great challenge. they had to work out -- if you cannot be married or have children, were you going to do about your urge toward motherhood your physical need? and that was something that took a lot of exploring, i must say. it is not the easiest thing to research. it was something that women had to deal with and dealt with in all kinds of interesting ways to be one such as? >> guest: i don't know how detailed you want me to get. i did a lot of research. a pioneering birth control expert. she wrote a book published in the early twenties called married love. married love, note. it was completely targeted at really explaining sex to married couples. and you have no idea how ignorant people could be. it just phenomenal, the stuff that people did not know. we, of course, are accustomed to being deluged with information on sex. this was not the case. it was really very tragic,
the government was not giving them proper welfare arrangements . so she was a great campaigner. i think in other fields, more intimate, more, and a sense, and word, emotional if you like. single women also had a great challenge. they had to work out -- if you cannot be married or have children, were you going to do about your urge toward motherhood your physical need? and that was something that took a lot of exploring, i must say. it is not the easiest thing to research. it was something that...
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Sep 8, 2013
09/13
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many were benefiting from huge government contracts. confronted with some -- such stark racism, it would have been understandable if these women had given up, but thousands of african-american women refused to let racism and discrimination keep them from serving their country in a time of need. one woman got a job as an inspector at an arsenal and pennsylvania. eller hunter left her position in taxes and secured a job in a california plant that built warships. in chicago that went to work for the illinois central railroad as section ends cannot shoveling senders and swung picks. betty murphy phillips was a journalist working for the family newspaper, the baltimore afro-american. she became the first black female overseas work correspondent when she traveled to europe in 1944. after getting sick, she reported from her hospital bed as black soldiers can tear bedside to tell their stores. will brown held a commercial pilot's license and a master mechanic certificate. you can imagine how unusual that was a late 30's. she taught aviation gla
many were benefiting from huge government contracts. confronted with some -- such stark racism, it would have been understandable if these women had given up, but thousands of african-american women refused to let racism and discrimination keep them from serving their country in a time of need. one woman got a job as an inspector at an arsenal and pennsylvania. eller hunter left her position in taxes and secured a job in a california plant that built warships. in chicago that went to work for...
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Jan 2, 2013
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limited government, yes, and we have to think about which what we can and can't do. like, i mean, -- but i think we have to bear in mind that we lost this last battle on november 6th, the war is by no means over on the contrary. and i think that if unless we keep it in focus, unless we keep reminding ourselves that the stakes in many particular war about as great as they can be, we're going lose. and it's got nothing to do with whether there's another regulation of the banks or, you know, whether taxes go up on the rich or don't go up on the rich. i don't don't say they are unimportant. they are tactical or intermediated measured involved in a strategic objective that i think barack obama is very clear about, and is determined to pursue and, god help us may it succeed in doing. [inaudible] [laughter] >> i want to add briefly and commenting on what norman said about those who love america and those who don't love america. i would like to add a quote from bill buck lee showing that how much you could love america -- [inaudible] and it's the line from the genesis of oak
limited government, yes, and we have to think about which what we can and can't do. like, i mean, -- but i think we have to bear in mind that we lost this last battle on november 6th, the war is by no means over on the contrary. and i think that if unless we keep it in focus, unless we keep reminding ourselves that the stakes in many particular war about as great as they can be, we're going lose. and it's got nothing to do with whether there's another regulation of the banks or, you know,...
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Dec 23, 2013
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you can't keep the whole government open when the government shuts down. >> mr. secretary let me ask you this. you'd made the statement september 27 at the lapse of appropriations with these important functions related to the department regarding collecting and analysis reporting to intelligence would continue in the midst of a shutdown. what happened between the time of that statement and a subsequent statement that says that he would have massively reduce staffing? >> congressman, during the days of the shutdown in the beginning of the shutdown there was not a flow of intelligence information coming in because our intelligence operation was in the same position that are financing was. >> mr. secretary with all due respect it's clear that you kept political appointees intact. it's clear that you eliminated jobs of professionals whose assignment is to protect this country. i think it's not clear to the american people why he would make that type of decision. >> congressman we follow the guidelines of the office of management and budget and we follow followed the
you can't keep the whole government open when the government shuts down. >> mr. secretary let me ask you this. you'd made the statement september 27 at the lapse of appropriations with these important functions related to the department regarding collecting and analysis reporting to intelligence would continue in the midst of a shutdown. what happened between the time of that statement and a subsequent statement that says that he would have massively reduce staffing? >> congressman,...
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Jan 5, 2013
01/13
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national government and state and local government play an important role in providing resources. that is part of the liberal model of the family itself. well, with conservatives the idea is a family that needs not economic protection, but more protection. that speaks to a very different role for the government. the government's job is not to help support economically, but to prevent them from experiencing were coming into contact with an immoral society. take the example of reproductive rights as an example. for many conservatives, this is simply an immoral process or act in government jobs should be to prevent it. and that is a legitimate role for government as conservatives view it. it is very important to the story. if you think about the liberal politicians, the notable politicians of that era, someone like fdr, john f. kennedy, lyndon johnson, these were political figures who believed in what we would now call the male breadwinner families. that was still part of the liberal idea. that was challenged in the 60s particularly by feminism and the gay and lesbian rights movement
national government and state and local government play an important role in providing resources. that is part of the liberal model of the family itself. well, with conservatives the idea is a family that needs not economic protection, but more protection. that speaks to a very different role for the government. the government's job is not to help support economically, but to prevent them from experiencing were coming into contact with an immoral society. take the example of reproductive rights...
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Aug 24, 2013
08/13
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they knew how to govern themselves. they had their own legislatures, own elected officials, and they had, you know, been for a hundred years -- adams writes about this in dissertation on the cannon and feudal law, but americans are different than europe in terms of politics for basic reasons so that there's not nearly the shock value as there is -- i mean, the shock experience in the united states when they move through the revolutionary experience because it's not really revolutionary, but more evolutionary. the secret of the american revolution is that it was not really a revolution. it was more of an evolution. the egyptians are going to have a very difficult time discovering what came naturally to us. this is not a comment on muslimism, okay? although, it's part of the package, but that they have no history or history of practicing democratic politics. you're welcome. >> thank you for coming and being a professional historian. question about how american revolution is taught. california just passed legislation sayin
they knew how to govern themselves. they had their own legislatures, own elected officials, and they had, you know, been for a hundred years -- adams writes about this in dissertation on the cannon and feudal law, but americans are different than europe in terms of politics for basic reasons so that there's not nearly the shock value as there is -- i mean, the shock experience in the united states when they move through the revolutionary experience because it's not really revolutionary, but...
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Jul 28, 2013
07/13
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they know how to govern themselves. they have their own legislatures for 100 years there was a dissertation that america has become different than in england and europe. there isn't nearly the shock value experience of the united states when they move through the revolutionary experience. the revolution really wasn't a revolution. it was more of an evolution. and the egyptians are going to have a very difficult time discovering what came naturally to less. this isn't a comment on muslim although it is part of the package they have no history. the have no history of practicing democratic politics. >> thank you for coming and for being a professional historian. a question about how the american revolution is taught. the past legislation is saying that all segments of american history now have to give portions to gay and transgendered. i'm not sure -- >> that is another thing. [laughter] >> my children who attended woodward academy was divided between african-americans, native americans, very segmented now. you have an ove
they know how to govern themselves. they have their own legislatures for 100 years there was a dissertation that america has become different than in england and europe. there isn't nearly the shock value experience of the united states when they move through the revolutionary experience. the revolution really wasn't a revolution. it was more of an evolution. and the egyptians are going to have a very difficult time discovering what came naturally to less. this isn't a comment on muslim...
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Mar 25, 2013
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it's a fantasy government. you know, it's kind of a disneyland government. [laughter] nobodiments to take -- nobody wants to take it away. my wife refused to go to the vatican after the first few times. it's got beautiful treasures in there, but it's a great fortress is great treasures inside, and everywhere, paintings of the donation of con stan tine, the mystical giving of worldly power to the pope, painting on chairs of the bishop peter, which he never was, coats of arms of all of the noble popes who took over in the renaissance, and she said, you know, what could be more against the gospel of jesus than this earthly trumpeting of power and pride? it's not going to go away, but as i say, we really should start treating it with the disrespect it deserves. [laughter] >> is it possible for a church or religion to have structure with hierarchy, implied leadership? is it possible to have that without coming into a toal tearianism, and if so, is it possible to do that, and what would be the best structure? >> yeah. is it possible for a church not to have a high
it's a fantasy government. you know, it's kind of a disneyland government. [laughter] nobodiments to take -- nobody wants to take it away. my wife refused to go to the vatican after the first few times. it's got beautiful treasures in there, but it's a great fortress is great treasures inside, and everywhere, paintings of the donation of con stan tine, the mystical giving of worldly power to the pope, painting on chairs of the bishop peter, which he never was, coats of arms of all of the noble...
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Jan 1, 2013
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she would have government officials, prime ministers, presidents and earned the reputation as a reporter willing to do anything and go anywhere for the sake of a story. thompson had the guts to ask her american public the questions they did not quote want to think about. mired in the dilution that they were protected from asian and european tumult by two aleutians, americans preferred the roar and affluence of the 1920s. .. has been frozen out along with national celebrity and the total federation of her peers, but it's constance grew and voice echoed across america and europe. just listen to this. in 1936 she was writing a thrice weekly column in the new york herald tribune that reached eight to 10 million readers today, and by 1937 she had received six honorary degrees from major colleges and universities and public radio broadcast on nbc had reached 5 million readers and she was rumored to be running for the u.s. senate. that was true but she was also thinking of running for president. in 1942 through radiobroadcast she would reach ordinary citizens in germany hoping to bring hitler d
she would have government officials, prime ministers, presidents and earned the reputation as a reporter willing to do anything and go anywhere for the sake of a story. thompson had the guts to ask her american public the questions they did not quote want to think about. mired in the dilution that they were protected from asian and european tumult by two aleutians, americans preferred the roar and affluence of the 1920s. .. has been frozen out along with national celebrity and the total...
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Mar 3, 2013
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it's helping to protect the nation against invaders have called up by the government and if the government in england gets to be oppressive or tyrannical, the militia is to serve as a counterbalance to the standing army in the colonial people and early americans had a tremendous fear of a standing army because standing armies for the way governments, monarchs would impose their will on people. it was always assumed the militia would act as a counterweight to the standing army and all the militias of all men are and what equaled away at the king's army or in this case the national army. washington did a very interesting case study in this because he is thought with alicia and he doesn't like them. they're not well trained. they run at the drop of a hat. the only time they say about this on sun homeground defending homes and they fight like tigers. it's difficult to get militia safe from new jersey. washington spends a great deal of his career trying to turn militia into regular soldiers. there's a line in the movie, the patriot without gibson, where mel gibson and heath ledger were lucky no
it's helping to protect the nation against invaders have called up by the government and if the government in england gets to be oppressive or tyrannical, the militia is to serve as a counterbalance to the standing army in the colonial people and early americans had a tremendous fear of a standing army because standing armies for the way governments, monarchs would impose their will on people. it was always assumed the militia would act as a counterweight to the standing army and all the...
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Nov 18, 2013
11/13
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and hamilton favored a branch strong third government. the power is essential for liberty in the first. and at as close side can come to play in a contemporary context. >> is there a contemporary point they are putting us on the past two political parties or factions? >> jefferson in the wake of the passage of the basic bill washington inciting jefferson and madison go on the trip up to new york it was jefferson's attention not to found political parties but to take people who had reservations about the constitution is even more so people in congress who had reservations about hamilton's economic program to bring about a concerted opposition not to undo but prevent him from going any further with that. jefferson had not planned a political party but it becomes a political party and within one year madison calls it a party and calls it the republican party in hamilton does the same in response to rally people that supported his vision to put together the federalist party. early on they realize that something like political parties were aro
and hamilton favored a branch strong third government. the power is essential for liberty in the first. and at as close side can come to play in a contemporary context. >> is there a contemporary point they are putting us on the past two political parties or factions? >> jefferson in the wake of the passage of the basic bill washington inciting jefferson and madison go on the trip up to new york it was jefferson's attention not to found political parties but to take people who had...
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Dec 28, 2013
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scottish ministers who govern overseas schools and loads of american students, colonial students head to scotland to study medicine. and establish the very first schools in the north american colonies established by american colonial students in new jersey and philadelphia. >> host: correct me if i am wrong, the principal players in the slave trade, and someone has a trade that comes out of small towns in bristol, remember how massive the slave trade is. and the enormously of the african trade in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, the ways in which the trade shade to the atlantic world and constituted the economy that connected europe to effort and south america. out of which the united states will be borne. >> host: in terms of building these campuses. who were these founders of these universities? where if a slave traders? >> guest: they are largely ministers from various denominations, colonial schools are denominational schools so if this puritan harvard, columbia, king's college, dutch reformed queens college, and presbyterian college of new jersey is princeton. those are
scottish ministers who govern overseas schools and loads of american students, colonial students head to scotland to study medicine. and establish the very first schools in the north american colonies established by american colonial students in new jersey and philadelphia. >> host: correct me if i am wrong, the principal players in the slave trade, and someone has a trade that comes out of small towns in bristol, remember how massive the slave trade is. and the enormously of the african...
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Dec 25, 2013
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there was a newfoundland regiment but at that time it wasn't part of canada pity is a self-governing colony. around evening time, the soldiers who were meant to go over the top would be coming into the trenches, the ones on the first wave would be given stage and wire cutters as i show here. the hope is that the barbed wire was a very effective antiinfantry within. a was used extensively by both sides. and the hope is that this artillery bombardment would cut the supply year, that it really varied in the places and the soldiers would get to the wire and supposedly they would try to cut trees of the comrades could go through. might all the soldiers tried to get some sleep. in some places the trenches were so crowded that the soldiers spent the last night. on the left of this illustration or sort of where you could see the bar and why year at night time the british soldiers would have gone out and cut a hole in their own wire and other words the barbwire in the british trenches because obviously you need a place the troops can go through. in the background by showing the bombardment an
there was a newfoundland regiment but at that time it wasn't part of canada pity is a self-governing colony. around evening time, the soldiers who were meant to go over the top would be coming into the trenches, the ones on the first wave would be given stage and wire cutters as i show here. the hope is that the barbed wire was a very effective antiinfantry within. a was used extensively by both sides. and the hope is that this artillery bombardment would cut the supply year, that it really...
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Jul 21, 2013
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government. do you think brigham young had he been alive when the issue came to a head would he have agreed to back off of his doctrine or would he have fought it tooth and nail? >> did fight it tooth and nail during his lifetime. the u.s. government was already putting pressure on brigham young as a church. i think if bush had come to shove he would have also been willing to abandon it in order to preserve the church. he didn't think he needed to until he died in 1877. so he did, he did very much support it. i think ultimately he liked the church later did would have sought to preserve the doctrine of celestial and eternal marriage and divorce from polygamy. thank you for your questions and for being >> you're watching book tv, nonfiction authors and books every weekend on c-span2. >> up next on book tv, a panel discussion on the creation of the sixth floor museum housed in the former texas school book depository which remembers the life, presidential tenure, and assassination of president john
government. do you think brigham young had he been alive when the issue came to a head would he have agreed to back off of his doctrine or would he have fought it tooth and nail? >> did fight it tooth and nail during his lifetime. the u.s. government was already putting pressure on brigham young as a church. i think if bush had come to shove he would have also been willing to abandon it in order to preserve the church. he didn't think he needed to until he died in 1877. so he did, he did...